Fitted Software Tools Modula-2: Difference between revisions
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A [[Modula-2]] development system for [[DOS]] originally introduced in 1987 as a fairly simple shareware compiler that over time grew to include an [[IDE]], a [[make]] facility, a linker, an automatic makefile generator and a execution profiler with only really a proper debugger missing for a decent M2 development system. | A [[Modula-2]] development system for [[DOS]] originally introduced in 1987 as a fairly simple shareware compiler that over time grew to include an [[IDE]], a [[make]] facility, a linker, an automatic makefile generator and a execution profiler with only really a proper debugger missing for a decent M2 development system. | ||
FST Modula-2 had a few features that were either unique or uncommon with other M2 for DOS development systems, it could for instance make use of [[C]] and other "foreign" libraries to a degree, and it had | FST Modula-2 had a few features that were either unique or uncommon with other M2 for DOS development systems, it could for instance make use of [[C]] and other "foreign" libraries to a degree, and it had object-oriented extensions unique to the system that program author designed in conjunction with noted Modula-2 authority Pat Terry of Rhodes University. | ||
FST stopped developing the product in 1996 and in 1998 announced that he would release the package as freeware a little later in the year as version 4, however what you got when you registered the program was the source to the libraries and this was not a part of the freeware release, which makes using the foreign libraries impossible since you have to change a part of the library. There is no functional difference between the Shareware version of 3.5 and the freeware v4 so no need to hunt down 4 if you have version 3.5 | FST stopped developing the product in 1996 and in 1998 announced that he would release the package as freeware a little later in the year as version 4, however what you got when you registered the program was the source to the libraries and this was not a part of the freeware release, which makes using the foreign libraries impossible since you have to change a part of the library. There is no functional difference between the Shareware version of 3.5 and the freeware v4 so no need to hunt down 4 if you have version 3.5 |
Revision as of 11:12, 13 January 2017
A Modula-2 development system for DOS originally introduced in 1987 as a fairly simple shareware compiler that over time grew to include an IDE, a make facility, a linker, an automatic makefile generator and a execution profiler with only really a proper debugger missing for a decent M2 development system.
FST Modula-2 had a few features that were either unique or uncommon with other M2 for DOS development systems, it could for instance make use of C and other "foreign" libraries to a degree, and it had object-oriented extensions unique to the system that program author designed in conjunction with noted Modula-2 authority Pat Terry of Rhodes University.
FST stopped developing the product in 1996 and in 1998 announced that he would release the package as freeware a little later in the year as version 4, however what you got when you registered the program was the source to the libraries and this was not a part of the freeware release, which makes using the foreign libraries impossible since you have to change a part of the library. There is no functional difference between the Shareware version of 3.5 and the freeware v4 so no need to hunt down 4 if you have version 3.5
Version
- Last known version: 4.0s
- Basically a re-release of version 3.5 without the shareware notice. There is no real difference between any of the 4.0x releases.
- Prerequisites
- DOS version 2 or higher, any version os OS/2 with the DOS subsystem installed.
Links & documentation
- S. R. Ladd,: Modula-2 Compilers: New Kids on the Block Mature. - Computer Language magazine March 1989 - pages 99 to 110. (FSTM2 v2.0a)
License
- Originally shareware, now closed source freeware.
Author
- Fitted Software Tools.
- Roger Carvalho
- Pat Terry (Help with documentation and OOP)